NVIDIA is slowly but surely expanding its list of Adaptive Sync monitors that are compatible with its proprietary G-Sync technology. Such displays are called "G-Sync Compatible", and, according to PCWorld, with the next update of the GeForce Game Ready graphics driver, seven monitors will join their list at once.

Recall that the G-Sync Compatible designation is assigned by NVIDIA to monitors that support Adaptive Sync technology (also known as AMD FreeSync) and have been tested by the company itself to meet its own G-Sync technology standards. On such monitors, when connected to NVIDIA graphics cards, you can fully use the technology of adaptive frame synchronization, "almost the same as on monitors with G-Sync."

In announcing the G-Sync Compatible initiative, NVIDIA announced a list of only 12 monitors that it believes are G-Sync compliant. Although NVIDIA tested more than 400 monitors for their selection. Gradually, the list of monitors compatible with G-Sync has expanded, and at the moment it has 17 models. And the new version of the NVIDIA graphics driver, which will be released next Tuesday, will bring guaranteed G-Sync support to seven more monitors from Acer, ASUS, AOpen, Gigabyte and LG:
- Acer KG271
- Acer XF240H Bmjdpr
- Acer XF270H Bbmiiprx
- AOpen 27HC1R Pbidpx
- ASUS VG248QG
- Gigabyte Aorus AD27QD
- LG 27GK750F

Adaptive Frame Sync is automatically enabled on G-Sync Compatible-certified monitors when the correct version of the graphics driver is installed on the system. Actually, it works the same way on monitors with full G-Sync. Also note that users of Adaptive Sync monitors that are not certified by NVIDIA can also try to enable frame sync manually. True, the technology can then work with some limitations or interruptions.
Source: 3dnews.ru
